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PostgreSQL AFTER INSERT Trigger

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to create a PostgreSQL AFTER INSERT trigger to call a function automatically after a row is inserted into a table.

Introduction to the PostgreSQL AFTER INSERT trigger

In PostgreSQL, a trigger is a database object associated with a table, which is automatically fired in response to an INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, or TRUNCATE event.

An AFTER INSERT trigger is a trigger that is fired after an INSERT event occurs on a table.

The AFTER INSERT trigger can access the newly inserted data using the NEW record variable. This NEW variable allows you to access the values of columns in the inserted row:

NEW.column_name

Typically, you use AFTER INSERT triggers for logging changes, updating related tables, or sending notifications based on the inserted data.

To create an AFTER INSERT trigger, you follow these steps:

First, define a function that will execute when the trigger is activated:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION trigger_function()
   RETURNS TRIGGER
   LANGUAGE PLPGSQL
AS
$$
BEGIN
   -- trigger logic
   -- ...
   RETURN NEW;
END;
$$

The RETURN NEW statement indicates that the function returns the modified row, which is the NEW row.

Second, create an AFTER INSERT trigger and bind the function to it:

CREATE TRIGGER trigger_name
AFTER INSERT
ON table_name
FOR EACH {ROW | STATEMENT}
EXECUTE FUNCTION trigger_function();

PostgreSQL AFTER INSERT trigger example

First, create a new table called members to store the member data:

CREATE TABLE members (
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
    email VARCHAR(100) UNIQUE
);

The members table has three columns id, name, and email. The id column is a serial and primary key column. The email column has a unique constraint to ensure the uniqueness of emails.

Second, create another table called memberships to store the memberships of the members:

CREATE TABLE memberships (
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    member_id INT NOT NULL REFERENCES members(id),
    membership_type VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'free'
);

The memberships table has three columns id, member_id, and membership_type:

  • The id is a serial and primary key column.
  • The member_id references the id column of the members table. It is a foreign key column.
  • The membership_type column has a default value of “free”.

Third, define a trigger function that inserts a default free membership for every member:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION create_membership_after_insert()
RETURNS TRIGGER AS $$
BEGIN
    INSERT INTO memberships (member_id)
    VALUES (NEW.id);
    RETURN NEW;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Fourth, define an AFTER INSERT trigger on the members table, specifying that it should execute the create_membership_after_insert() function for each row inserted:

CREATE TRIGGER after_insert_member_trigger
AFTER INSERT ON members
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE FUNCTION create_membership_after_insert();

Fifth, insert a new row into the members table:

INSERT INTO members(name, email)
VALUES('John Doe', '[[email protected]](../cdn-cgi/l/email-protection.html)')
RETURNING *;

Output:

id |   name   |       email
----+----------+--------------------
  1 | John Doe | [[email protected]](../cdn-cgi/l/email-protection.html)
(1 row)

Sixth, retrieve data from the memberships table:

SELECT * FROM memberships;

Output:

id | member_id | membership_type
----+-----------+-----------------
  1 |         1 | free
(1 row)

Summary

  • Use an AFTER INSERT trigger to call a function automatically after an INSERT operation successfully on the associated table.

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